The Case For Judeo-Christian Values: Part II
By Dennis Prager -townhall.com
17/1/05
For those who subscribe to Judeo-Christian values, right and wrong, good and evil, are
derived from God, not from reason alone, nor from the human heart, the state or through
majority rule.
Though most college-educated Westerners never hear the case for the need for God-based
morality because of the secular outlook that pervades modern education and the media, the
case is both clear and compelling: If there is no transcendent source of morality
(morality is the word I use for the standard of good and evil), "good" and
"evil" are subjective opinions, not objective realities.
In other words, if there is no God who says, "Do not murder" ("Do not
kill" is a mistranslation of the Hebrew which, like English, has two words for
homicide), murder is not wrong. Many people may think it is wrong, but that is their
opinion, not objective moral fact. There are no moral "facts" if there is no
God; there are only moral opinions.
Years ago, I debated this issue at Oxford with Jonathan Glover, currently the professor of
ethics at King's College, University of London, and one of the leading atheist moralists
of our time.
Because he is a man of rare intellectual honesty, he acknowledged that without God,
morality is subjective. He is one of the few secularists who do.
This is the reason for the moral relativism -- "What I think is right is right for
me, what you think is right is right for you" -- that pervades modern society. The
secularization of society is the primary reason vast numbers of people believe, for
example, that "one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter"; why the
best educated were not able say that free America was a more moral society than the
totalitarian Soviet Union; why, in short, deep moral confusion afflicted the 20th century
and continues in this century.
That is why The New York Times, the voice of secular moral relativism, was so repulsed by
President Ronald Reagan's declaration that the Soviet Union was an "evil
empire." The secular world -- especially its left -- fears and rejects the language
of good and evil because it smacks of religious values and violates their moral
relativism. It is perhaps the major difference between America and Europe. As a New York
Times article on European-American differences noted last year, "Americans are widely
regarded as more comfortable with notions of good and evil, right and wrong, than
Europeans. . . . " No wonder. America is a Judeo-Christian society; Europe (and the
American Democratic Party) is largely secular.
In the late 1970s, in a public interview in Los Angeles, I asked one of the leading
secular liberal thinkers of the past generation, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Arthur
Schlesinger Jr., if he would say that the United States was a morally superior society to
that of the Soviet Union. Even when I repeated the question, and clarified that I readily
acknowledged the existence of good individuals in the Soviet Union and bad ones in
America, he refused to do so.
A major reason for the left's loathing of George W. Bush is his use of moral language --
such as in his widely condemned description of the regimes of North Korea, Iran and Iraq
as an "axis of evil." These people reject the central Judeo-Christian value of
the existence of objective good and evil and our obligation to make such judgments.
Secularism has led to moral confusion, which in turn has led to moral paralysis.
If you could not call the Soviet Union an "evil empire" or the Iranian, North
Korean and Iraqi regimes an "evil axis," you have rendered the word
"evil" useless. And indeed it is not used in sophisticated secular company --
except in reference to those who do use it (usually religious Christians and Jews).
Is abortion morally wrong? To the secular world, the answer is "It's between a woman
and her physician." There is no clearer _expression of moral relativism: Every woman
determines whether abortion is moral. On the other hand, to the individual with
Judeo-Christian values, it is not between anyone and anyone else. It is between society
and God. Even among religious people who differ in their reading of God's will, it is
still never merely "between a woman and her physician."
And to those who counter these arguments for God-based morality with the question,
"Whose God?" the answer is the God who revealed His moral will in the Old
Testament, which Jews and Christians -- and no other people -- regard as divine
revelation.
The best-known verse in the Bible is "Love your neighbor as yourself" (Leviticus
19:18). It is a reflection of the secular age in which we live that few people are aware
that the verse concludes with the words, "I am God." Though entirely secularized
in common parlance, the greatest of the ethical principles comes from God. Otherwise it is
just another man-made suggestion, no more compelling than "Cross at the green, not in
between."
©2004 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
Source: townhall.com